

This move was a good one as it allowed RUFUS ZUPHALL to enjoy a level of success that many German bands would never experience. One of the band's strategies was to market itself out of its homeland and to appeal more to the neighboring nations of the Netherlands and Belgium with massive exposure at the jazz festival in Belzen, Belgium in 1970 which included other non-jazz artists such as Black Sabbath, Cat Stevens and May Blitz. While only existing until 1972 before disbanding (a reformation occurred in 1999), RUFUS ZUPHALL released two albums with this debut WEISS DER TEUFEL (translated as "The Devil Knows") in 1970 thus considered one of Germany's pioneering Krautrock bands. The band's sound was a mix of prog rock, blues rock, hard rock and progressive folk with a heavy use of flute that got the band compared with Jethro Tull.


Founded in Aachen in 1969 by Günter Krause (guitar, vocals), Helmut Lieblang (bass), Klaus Gülden (flute) and Udo Dahmen (drums), this band was decidedly not as interested in taking the separatist journey into the realms of the tripped out sounds that the homeland was undertaking and instead looked towards the English prog scene for inspiration. RUFUS ZUPHALL has been considered by many to be one of the more important early bands that got lumped into Germany's Krautrock scene in the early 1970s.
